465.24.02 page fault

This entire thread is people confirming every driver version since 470 (date of release) have the problem, if you’ve never experienced it why are you on the thread for a problem you’ve never had

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A quick test with 470.42.01 on arch: it work’s. At least, no crash and I got a usable system. But I do not use CUDA, openCL or 32Bit stuff.

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Maybe because the entire thread is people confirming issue since 460.80 and 470.42.01 has been shipped after @amrits confirmed issues is solved ?

Ok so on Arch having installed:

  • nvidia-dkms-performance
  • nvidia-utils-performance
  • nvidia-settings-performance
  • opencl-nvidia-performance
  • lib32-nvidia-utils-performance
  • lib32-opencl-nvidia-performance

Giving me a system with:

  • nvidia-dkms-performance 470.42.01-1
  • nvidia-utils-performance 470.42.01-1
  • linux 5.12.11.arch1-1
  • nvidia-settings-performance 470.42.01-1
  • lib32-nvidia-utils-performance 470.42.01-1
  • opencl-nvidia-performance 470.42.01-1
  • lib32-opencl-nvidia-performance 470.42.01-1

Everything seems to work fine:

  • X seems to be working fine
  • Steam launches
  • Native games seem to work (tried Factorio)
  • nvidia-container-toolkit seems to work as well with the annoying passing in devices but still works
sudo docker run --gpus all \
    --device /dev/nvidia0 \
    --device /dev/nvidia-uvm \
    --device /dev/nvidia-uvm-tools \
    --device /dev/nvidiactl \
    -it nvidia/cuda:11.0-base nvidia-smi

I have yet to try a cuda sample as I have nothing on hand ready/ quickly to do so

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Is there a solution for Ubuntu users ?

On Fedora 34 installing 470.42.01 from rpmfusion rawhide fixes the problem for me.

it works now, as suggested i have installed 450-server drivers

On Ubuntu you can either install the nvidia-driver-460-server which has the older 460.73.01 without the bug, install the beta 470 driver directly from Nvidia or from this PPA Nvidia testing - Do not use on production systems : Alberto Milone

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Just tested on my end with KDE Neon 20.04 and it finally works!

I needed to go back, however, because of Steam wouldn’t launch. I am glad, however, that it finally was resolved. Hopefully the fix will land on 465, too!

Have you tried installing the corresponding lib32-nvidia-utils packages as well?
Steam requires the lib32 versions to run.
Basically the x64 and lib32-nvidia-utils packages BOTH need to be installed in order for everything to run properly.

I tried. Doesn’t exist in that PPA.

$ apt-cache depends nvidia-driver-470
nvidia-driver-470
  Depends: libnvidia-gl-470
  Depends: nvidia-dkms-470
  Depends: nvidia-dkms-470
  Depends: nvidia-kernel-common-470
  Depends: nvidia-kernel-common-470
  Depends: nvidia-kernel-source-470
  Depends: libnvidia-compute-470
  Depends: libnvidia-extra-470
  Depends: nvidia-compute-utils-470
  Depends: libnvidia-decode-470
  Depends: libnvidia-encode-470
  Depends: nvidia-utils-470
  Depends: xserver-xorg-video-nvidia-470
  Depends: libnvidia-cfg1-470
  Depends: libnvidia-ifr1-470
  Depends: libnvidia-fbc1-470
  Recommends: nvidia-settings
  Recommends: nvidia-prime
  Recommends: <libnvidia-compute-470:i386>
  Recommends: <libnvidia-decode-470:i386>
  Recommends: <libnvidia-encode-470:i386>
  Recommends: <libnvidia-ifr1-470:i386>
  Recommends: <libnvidia-fbc1-470:i386>
  Recommends: <libnvidia-gl-470:i386>

I can confirm - 470.42.01 fixes the problem on Arch.

There have been some updates today, and there are 32 bit packages now, and Steam works for me on 21.04

Was unable to boot into Linux Mint 20.1 64-bit Xfce (based on Ubuntu 20.04 64-bit) when connected to a monitor via DP or USB-C and running Nvidia drivers newer than 460.73.02.

In contrast, HDMI was unaffected, and rolling the driver back to 460.73.01 has served as a temporary workaround – with this driver, I can boot when the computer is connected to monitors with DP and/or USB-C (as well as with HDMI).

It appears that the latest new feature driver from the Graphics Drivers PPA for 'buntu Linux is version 465.31, but this one had the same problem of not being able to boot if connected to a DP or USB-C monitor.

Which forthcoming Nvidia driver for Linux will have fixed this issue?

Thanks!

@Hypersphere The current answer is both two posts above yours and another 5 or so posts above that.

“I can confirm - 470.42.01 fixes the problem on Arch.”
“On Fedora 34 installing 470.42.01 from rpmfusion rawhide fixes the problem for me.”

I’m waiting patiently for Manjaro Stable to adopt the 470 drivers before updating.

I can confirm: 470.42.01 is working fine for me on both monitors connected via DP.
Specs: 465.24.02 page fault - #45 by Tee

new drivers:

Graphics:  Device-1: NVIDIA GP104 [GeForce GTX 1080] driver: nvidia v: 470.42.01 
           Display: x11 server: X.Org 1.20.11 driver: loaded: nvidia resolution: 1: 2560x1440 2: 2560x1440 
           OpenGL: renderer: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080/PCIe/SSE2 v: 4.6.0 NVIDIA 470.42.01 

Installed:

aur/nvidia-settings-performance 470.42.01-4 (+6 1.70) (Installed)
aur/nvidia-utils-performance 470.42.01-4 (+6 1.70) (Installed)
aur/opencl-nvidia-performance 470.42.01-4 (+6 1.70) (Installed)
aur/lib32-opencl-nvidia-performance 470.42.01-4 (+6 1.70) (Installed)
aur/nvidia-dkms-performance 470.42.01-4 (+6 1.70) (Installed)
aur/lib32-nvidia-utils-performance 470.42.01-4 (+6 1.70) (Installed)

After creating a backup of my previous /etc/X11/xorg.conf I let sudo nvidia-xconfig create a new one.
Everything seems to work fine for now.

Are you on a rolling release distro? I updated my manjaro but it didn’t work for me yet.

I’m running manjaro as well.

Though I had to uninstall the mhwd/stable drivers and had to install the nvidia-*-performance packages “manually” using pacman from aur ( https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/nvidia-dkms-performance/ )

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Guys, use Tk-Glitch’s AIO installer, it’s as easy as:

git clone https://github.com/Frogging-Family/nvidia-all.git
cd nvidia-all
makepkg -si
sudo mkinitcpio -P

And it is always working without any problems. You can choose from tens of different driver versions and it’s working on any Arch-based distro.

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Many thanks for confirming that a solution has apparently been found.

I will probably stay with the earlier driver until 470.42 is available in the Linux Mint repo and until there is a CUDA version that will be compatible with the new driver.